Menoikio (Greek: Μενοίκιο, also known to the local populations as "Bozdakas" and "Bozdas", Greek corruptions of the Turkish name "Boz Dag", which was applied to the mountain by the Turks in Ottoman time, Bulgarian: Змийница, Zmiynitsa) is a mountain range in the eastern Serres and western Dramaregional units of eastern Macedonia, Greece. The highest peak of the mountain is Mavromata at 1,963 m.
Geography
To the west, it is connected with the Vrontous mountain range and to the north via the Mavro Vouno mountain to Orvilos. Menoikio is mostly composed of marble and is almost entirely deforested.[2]
The nearest significant settlements are Serres, Nea Zichni, Emmanouil Pappas and Agio Pnevma to the south and Alistrati and Mikropoli to the west and north. Otherwise the mountain is among the least populated in the Balkans.
History
On the mountain is testified the existence, in the Roman (imperial) times, of marble quarries and iron mines.[3][4]
A notable landmark of the mountain is the Byzantine monastery of John the Baptist (founded in 1270), 8 km to the north of the city of Serres. Gennadius, the first Ecumenical Patriarch after the Fall of Constantinople, after his resignation in 1465 lived as monk in the monastery, ended his days and was buried there in 1473.[5][6] His relics were exhumed in 1854 and the following epigram was erected in the place where his grave stood:
This is the monastery of Prodromus, which is praised with hymns by the people
the hoary mother of sacred Macedonians
and this is the coffin of Patriarch Gennadius, whose glory was great,
the immortal deceased.
^Iordan Nikolov Ivanov, The local names between lower Struma and lower Mesta: Contribution to the research of Bulgarian toponymy in the Aegean region., Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, 1982, p.7(in Bulgarian)]
^Georgi Georgiev, The iron ore mining industry in Marvashko (Alibotush mountain and the surrounding mountains), Sofia, 1953, p.14 (in Bulgarian)
^[1] Dimitrios C. Samsaris, A History of Serres (in the Ancient and Roman Times) (in Greek), Thessaloniki 1999, p.222-228 (Website of Municipality of Serres)
^[2] Dimitrios C. Samsaris,The marble quarry of ancient Monoikos, "Makedonika" 18(1978), p. 226-240